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Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Underground Water Could be the Solution to Green Heating and Cooling

 News Release:


Decarbonizing the grid means storing energy from renewables. Aquifers can do that.
ALIYAH KOVNER | (510) 486-6376 | APRIL 5, 2023
Jenny Nuss/Berkeley Lab 
About 12% of the total global energy demand comes from heating and cooling homes and businesses. A new study suggests that using underground water to maintain comfortable temperatures could reduce consumption of natural gas and electricity in this sector by 40% in the United States. The approach, called aquifer thermal energy storage (ATES), could also help prevent blackouts caused by high power demand during extreme weather events.

“We need storage to absorb the fluctuating energy from solar and wind, and most people are interested in batteries and other kinds of electrical storage. But we were wondering whether there's any opportunity to use geothermal energy storage, because heating and cooling is such a predominant part of the energy demand for buildings,” said first author A.T.D Perera, a former postdoctoral researcher at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) now at Princeton University’s Andlinger Center for Energy and Environment.

“We found that, with ATES, a huge amount of energy can be stored, and it can be stored for a long period of time,” Perera said. “As a result, the heating and cooling energy demand during extreme hot or cold periods can be met without adding an additional burden on the grid, making urban energy infrastructure more resilient.”

The study, published this week in Applied Energy, is one of the first examinations of how ATES could fit into the larger goal of decarbonizing U.S. energy systems by storing intermittent renewable energy to use when the sun isn’t shining and the turbines aren’t spinning. After building a comprehensive technological and economic simulation of an energy system, the authors found that ATES is a compelling option for heating and cooling energy storage that, alongside other technologies such as batteries, could help end our reliance on fossil fuel-derived backup power and enable a fully renewable grid.

Putting thermodynamics to work

ATES is a delightfully simple concept that leverages the heat-absorbing property of water and the natural geological features of the planet. You simply pump water up from existing underground reservoirs and heat it at the surface in the summer with environmental heat or excess energy from solar, or any time of the year with wind. Then you pump it back down.

“It actually stays fairly hot because the Earth is a pretty good insulator,” explained co-author Peter Nico, deputy director of the Energy Geosciences Division at Berkeley Lab and lead of the Resilient Energy, Water and Infrastructure Domain. “So then when you pull it up in the winter, months later, that water's way hotter than the ambient air and you can use it to heat your buildings. Or vice versa, you can pull up water and let it cool and then you can put it back down and store it until you need cooling during hot summer months. It's a way of storing energy as temperature underground.”
Jenny Nuss/Berkeley Lab
ATES is not yet widely used in the United States, though it is gaining recognition internationally, most notably in the Netherlands. One major perk is that these systems get “free” thermal energy from seasonal temperature changes, which can be bolstered by the addition of artificial heating and cooling generated by electricity. As such, they perform very well in areas with large seasonal fluctuations, but have the potential to work anywhere, so long as there is wind or solar to hook up to. In regards to other impacts, ATES systems are designed to avoid impinging upon critical drinking water resources – often the water used is from deeper aquifers than the drinking water supply – and do not introduce any chemicals into the water.

How does it perform?

To get some concrete numbers estimating how much energy ATES could save on the U.S. grid, and how much it would cost to deploy, the team designed a case study using a computational model of a neighborhood in Chicago. This virtual neighborhood was composed of 58 two-story, single-family residence buildings with typical residential heating and cooling that were hooked up to a simulation of an energy grid with multiple possible energy sources and storage options, including ATES. Future climate projections were used to understand how much of the neighborhood’s total energy budget is taken up by heating and cooling demands currently, and how this might change in the future. Finally, a microgrid simulation was designed for the neighborhood that included renewable energy technologies and ATES to evaluate the technoeconomic feasibility and climate resilience. Putting all these factors together into one model would not have been possible without the team’s diverse expertise across the energy geosciences, climate science, and building science fields.

The results showed that adding ATES to the grid could reduce consumption of petroleum products by up to 40%, though it would cost 15 to 20% more than existing energy storage technologies.  

“But, on the other hand, energy storage technologies are having sharp cost reductions, and after just a few years of developing ATES, we could easily break even. That’s why it’s quite important that we start to invest in this research and start building real-world prototype systems,” said Perera.

“ATES does not need space compared with above-ground tank-based water or ice storage systems. ATES is also more efficient and can scale up for large community cooling or heating compared with traditional geothermal heat pump systems that rely on heat transfer with the underground earth soil,” added Tianzhen Hong, a co-author and senior scientist at the Building Technology and Urban Systems Division.

Another major benefit of ATES is that it will become more efficient as weather becomes more extreme in the coming years due to climate change. The hotter summers and harsher winters predicted by the world’s leading climate models will have many downsides, but one upside is that they could supercharge the amount of free thermal energy that can be stored with ATES. “It’s making lemonade, right? If you're going to have these extreme heat events, you might as well store some of that heat for when you have the extreme cold event,” said Nico.

ATES will also make the future grid more resilient to outages caused by high power demands during heat waves – which happen quite often these days in many high-population U.S. areas, including Chicago. Because ATES-driven cooling uses far less electricity than air conditioners, it only needs enough power to pump the water around.

“It's very much a realistic thing to do, and this work was really about showing its value and how the costs can be offset,” said Nico. “This technology is ready to go, so to speak. We just need to do it.”

This research was funded by the Department of Energy’s Geothermal Technologies Office.
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Wednesday, March 22, 2023

A Biofuel Breakthrough, Courtesy of Fungi

 Berkeley Lab News Release:


Researchers prove that tough, woody lignin can be broken down – a key step in plant-based biofuel production – by fungi in an anaerobic environment
MEDIA RELATIONS | (510) 486-6376 | MARCH 22, 2023
Bianca Susara/Berkeley Lab 

It’s a tough job, but someone’s got to do it. In this case, the “job” is the breakdown of lignin, the structural molecule that gives plants strength and rigidity. One of the most abundant terrestrial polymers (large molecules made of repeating subunits called monomers) on Earth, lignin surrounds valuable plant fibers and other molecules that could be converted into biofuels and other commodity chemicals – if we could only get past that rigid plant cell wall.

Fortunately, the rather laborious process already occurs in the guts of large herbivores through the actions of anaerobic microbes that cows, goats, and sheep rely on to release the nutrients trapped behind the biopolymer. In a paper published in the journal Nature Microbiology, UC Santa Barbara chemical engineering and biological engineering professor Michelle O’Malley and collaborators prove that a group of anaerobic fungi – Neocallimastigomycetes – are up to the task. O’Malley is part of the Department of Energy (DOE)’s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) where she serves as the Deputy Director for Microbial and Enzyme Discovery. The mission of this group is to explore targeted ecosystems and discover novel microbes and enzymes that break down plant cell walls, and in particular the lignin within them.

“You can think of lignin as kind of a skeletal system for plants,” said O’Malley, whose research focuses on finding and accessing alternate sources of energy and chemicals from what would otherwise be considered plant waste. Additionally, she said, lignin has properties that make the plant resistant to physical degradation by enzymes and pathogens. “Lignin is really important – it provides that hardiness and structure, but it’s equally difficult to break down for the exact same reason.”

For decades it was thought that lignin could be degraded only in the presence of oxygen. “It takes time, and depends on certain chemical species – such as free oxygen radicals – that to the best of everyone’s knowledge could only be made with the help of oxygen,” O’Malley explained.

However, there have been hints all along that nature has more than one way of stripping away the lignin. In the industrial biomass world, to access the cellulose and hemicellulose behind the lignin, plant biomass typically has to undergo pre-treatment. But in the O’Malley Lab’s work with anaerobic microbes, pre-treatment has never been necessary.

“We’ve never had to extract the lignin out of there because the fungi we work with are just happy to extract the cellulose and hemicellulose on their own,” she said. “So the fact that these fungi could grow on non-pretreated plant biomass was always a feature that was unique and unusual, and we hypothesized that they must have a way of moving the lignin around.”

To find out for sure, the O’Malley Lab conducted experiments with members of the Neocallimastigomycetes group, based on genetic findings previously made by collaborators at the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI). Tom Lankiewicz, the study’s lead author, cultivated some of these fungi on poplar, sorghum and switchgrass biomass in an oxygen-free environment. The choice of these three types of biomass came from the various ways lignin presents itself in nature, from the flexible stems and leaves of the grasses to the more rigid wood of poplar. In addition, these plants are being eyed by DOE as renewable carbon sources to produce sustainable biofuels and bio-based products.

Then the team, along with collaborators at Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (GLBRC), tracked the progress of the fungi as they went to work on the tough fibers.

The researchers found that indeed, Neocallimastix californiae did break down the plants’ tough cell walls. Using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy performed at JBEI, they could identify specific lignin bond breakages in the absence of oxygen.

“The nuclear magnetic resonance showed that sorghum biomass is favored by the anaerobic fungi, as compared to switchgrass and poplar,” said Yu Gao, a co-author and project scientist in the Plant Systems Biology group at JBEI. “We were excited to see almost complete breakdown of the key structural bonds between lignin monomers in the sorghum.”

“This is really a paradigm shift in terms of how people think about the fate of lignin in the absence of oxygen,” O’Malley said. “You could extend this to understand what happens to lignin in a compost pile, in an anaerobic digester, or in very deep environments where no oxygen is available. It pushes our understanding of what happens to biomass in these environments and alters our perception of what’s possible and the chemistry of what’s happening there.”

While this research proves that lignin can be broken down by fungi in oxygen-free environments, the next challenge for the researchers is to find out exactly how. Are there enzymes mediating this process? Is this a feature of anaerobes in general? Like with any intriguing research, each answer opens up more questions – questions that invite more research and fruitful collaborations.

Co-author Igor Grigoriev, a senior staff scientist at JGI, is looking forward to future work detailing the fungi’s lignin-digesting machinery and delving into the other interesting functions that these microbes have to offer. “At JGI, we’re very interested in engaging the research community into characterization of fungal genes of unknown function, especially those that are found across such a large group of fungi as Neocallimastigomycetes – the family that N. californiae belongs to. Genes that are maintained across large evolutionary distances are usually very important, because otherwise evolution efficiently eliminates what is not needed.”

JBEI and GLBRC are both DOE Bioenergy Research Centers. JBEI and JGI, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, are both managed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
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Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest scientific challenges are best addressed by teams, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and its scientists have been recognized with 16 Nobel Prizes. Today, Berkeley Lab researchers develop sustainable energy and environmental solutions, create useful new materials, advance the frontiers of computing, and probe the mysteries of life, matter, and the universe. Scientists from around the world rely on the Lab’s facilities for their own discovery science. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory, managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science.
 
DOE's Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit energy.gov/science.

Monday, March 20, 2023

DOE Renews Funding for Berkeley Lab's Joint BioEnergy Institute

 Berkeley Lab News:


MEDIA RELATIONS | (510) 486-5183 | MARCH 17, 2023
Aindrila Mukhopadhyay and Maren Wehrs work on fungi-produced indigoidine, a sustainably produced indigo alternative, at JBEI. (Credit: Marilyn Sargent/Berkeley Lab)
The Department of Energy’s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), led by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), was selected as one of four Department of Energy (DOE) Bioenergy Research Centers (BRC) to be awarded a combined total of $590 million to support innovative research on biofuels and bioproducts. 

These new BRC awards, announced today by the U.S. Department of Energy, will kick off JBEI’s fourth five-year funding phase. “To meet our future energy needs, we will need versatile renewables like bioenergy as a low-carbon fuel for some parts of our transportation sector,” said Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “Continuing to fund the important scientific work conducted at our Bioenergy Research Centers is critical to ensuring these sustainable resources can be an efficient and affordable part of our clean energy future.” 

Each center will initially receive $27.5 million for fiscal year 2023 with the possibility of additional funding for the next four years of the program cycle. JBEI and the other centers conduct basic science research to create biofuels and bioproducts from non-food plants. Each BRC has their own distinct research mission and programmatic goals, however, this new funding also specifically earmarks funds for all four BRCs to collaborate together on shared strategic goals.

“We are very excited that the Department of Energy has awarded us with another five years of funding to continue our path-breaking research,” said Jay Keasling, JBEI’s chief executive officer. “This work will enable the cost-effective production of carbon neutral biofuels and carbon negative bioproducts from lignocellulosic biomass. Usage of these fuels and products will reduce the nation’s dependence on fossil fuels while significantly reducing the amount of carbon added to the atmosphere and contamination of the environment."

JBEI was established in 2007 by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research within DOE’s Office of Science along with the Center for Bioenergy Innovation, led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center led by the University of Wisconsin—Madison in partnership with Michigan State University. The Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation, led by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, was added in 2017. 

In addition to Berkeley Lab, JBEI’s partner institutions are the University of California (UC) campuses at Berkeley, Davis, San Diego, and Santa Barbara; Iowa State University; the Georgia Institute of Technology; Northwestern University, the University of Adelaide in Australia, Sandia National Laboratories; the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and Brookhaven National Laboratory.

Since its founding fifteen years ago, JBEI research has produced 1,093 peer-reviewed publications, 120 patents, 176 technology licenses, and 12 startup companies. JBEI has long been a leader in establishing technologies that propel the U.S. bioeconomy forward in a competitive market. JBEI has made several significant scientific achievements in its prior funding phase, including:

  • Discovery of advanced feedstock agnostic biomass pretreatment solvents, such as ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents. This included demonstrating a one-pot integrated ionic liquid-based biomass conversion technology that processed mixed woody biomass at a 1500-liter scale, validating the commercial feasibility of the technology by achieving an overall conversion efficiency from biomass to a biofuel of nearly 80%.
  • Creating new biosynthetic routes to advanced sustainable fuels for aviation and rocket fuel by harnessing the modular nature of polyketide synthases to develop new biosynthetic pathways that when expressed in bacterial hosts, convert sugars to polycyclopropanated fatty acid methyl ester (POP-FAME). 
  • Engineering sorghum, switchgrass, and poplar to reduce lignin and other compounds that make them hard to break down while retaining the plants’ health and ability to grow. Some plants have also been engineered to produce value-added compounds that can be used to produce useful products such as renewable polymers and biodegradable plastics. 
  • Developing a new framework to determine how much accumulation of value-added products in planta compensates for the costs of extraction.

In recent years, biomanufacturing (the biological production of fuels, products and components that are traditionally made through chemical processes) has become a vital part of the U.S. strategy to create sustainably produced and consistent supply chains. The recent National Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing Initiative also establishes this national priority as a means to introduce new industries and employment opportunities in the U.S. 

Biomanufacturing also holds significant promise to resolve multiple problems at once. JBEI recently partnered with Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Biofuels and Bioproducts Process Development Unit (ABPDU) and the California Energy Commission to develop a process that could convert forest debris and agricultural waste into usable fuel. These technologies are currently undergoing pilot testing and could be available for wider roll-out in the near future. 

California is a recognized leader in the biotechnology sector and is well-poised to ramp up biomanufacturing in the state as a complementary industry in agricultural regions such as the Central and Imperial Valleys. JBEI is working on technologies to convert forest thinnings generated by healthy forest efforts, bioenergy crops, farm residues, and other biomass wastes into high value bio-based products and sustainable aviation fuels. This could offer new economic opportunities for farmers and rural communities in California, and throughout the west, and an opportunity to diversify and strengthen local economies. JBEI collaborates with farmers and rural industry in California to conduct studies of sorghum and other bioenergy crops in field tests.

JBEI is a well-known leader in developing the bioeconomy workforce of the future and partners with many organizations to host students, industry trainees, and postdocs at their Emeryville, CA headquarters. This proximity to the hub of the burgeoning biomanufacturing industry also makes JBEI alumni well-sought after for employment in the field. JBEI also organizes the annual Introductory College Level Experience in Microbiology (iCLEM) - a paid summer science intensive and college preparation program for under-resourced Bay Area high school students. 

“JBEI partners with many universities and organizations around the country to train the diverse bioeconomy workforce of the future to steward a better planet,” said Keasling.
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Friday, February 24, 2023

On the Road to Better Solid-State Batteries

 Berkeley Lab News Release:


A Berkeley Lab-led team designs next-gen batteries at the atomic level
THERESA DUQUE | (510) 495-2418 | FEBRUARY 23, 2023
Shown left: Conventional solid “ordered” electrolyte made of just one type of metal (blue spheres). The movement of lithium ions (yellow sphere) is slow and limited, thus hampering ion conductivity and battery performance. (Gray spheres represent oxygen.) Shown right: Ions move significantly faster through “disordered” solid electrolyte: Mixing different types of metals (blue, teal, and navy spheres) creates new pathways – much like the addition of expressways on a congested highway – through which lithium ions can move quickly through the electrolyte. (Credit: Jenny Nuss/Berkeley Lab)
Adapted from a Florida State University news release. 

A team from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and Florida State University has designed a new blueprint for solid-state batteries that are less dependent on specific chemical elements, particularly critical metals that are challenging to source due to supply chain issues. Their work, reported recently in the journal Science, could advance solid-state batteries that are efficient and affordable.  

Touted for their high energy density and superior safety, solid-state batteries could be a game-changer for the electric car industry. But developing one that is affordable and also conductive enough to power a car for hundreds of miles on a single charge has long been a challenging hurdle to overcome. 

“With our new approach to solid-state batteries, you don’t have to give up affordability for performance. Our work is the first to solve this problem by designing a solid electrolyte with not just one metal but with a team of affordable metals,” said co-first author Yan Zeng, a staff scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division.  

In a lithium-ion battery, the electrolyte works like a transfer hub where lithium ions move with electric charge to either power a device or recharge the battery.

Like other batteries, solid-state batteries store energy and then release it to power devices. But rather than liquid or polymer gel electrolytes found in lithium-ion batteries, they use a solid electrolyte. 

Government, research, and academia have heavily invested in the research and development of solid-state batteries because the liquid electrolytes designed for many commercial batteries are more prone to overheating, fire, and loss of charge. 

However, many of the solid-state batteries constructed thus far are based on specific types of metals that are expensive and not available in large quantities. Some aren’t found at all in the United States. 

For the current study, Zeng – along with Bin Ouyang, an assistant professor in chemistry and biochemistry at Florida State University – and senior author Gerbrand Ceder, a Berkeley Lab faculty senior scientist and UC Berkeley professor of materials science and engineering, demonstrated a new type of solid electrolyte consisting of a mix of various metal elements. Zeng and Ouyang first developed the idea for this work while finishing their postdoctoral research at Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley under the supervision of Ceder.

The new materials could result in a more conductive solid electrolyte that is less dependent on a large quantity of an individual element.

In experiments at Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley, the researchers demonstrated the new solid electrolyte by synthesizing and testing several lithium-ion and sodium-ion materials with multiple mixed-metals. 

They observed that the new multi-metal materials performed better than expected, displaying an ionic conductivity several orders of magnitude faster than the single-metal materials. Ionic conductivity is a measurement of how quickly lithium ions move to conduct electric charge. 

The researchers theorize that mixing many different types of metals together creates new pathways – much like the addition of expressways on a congested highway – through which lithium ions can move quickly through the electrolyte. Without these pathways, the movement of lithium ions would be slow and limited when they travel through the electrolyte from one end of the battery to the other, Zeng explained. 

To validate candidates for the multi-metal design, the researchers performed advanced theoretical calculations based on a method called density-functional theory on supercomputers at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC). Using scanning transmission electron microscopes (STEM) at the Molecular Foundry, the researchers confirmed that each electrolyte is made of only one type of material – what scientists call a “single phase” – with unusual distortions giving rise to the new ion transport pathways in its crystal structure.

The discovery enables new opportunities to design next-generation ionic conductors. The next step in this research is to apply the new approach that Zeng has developed with Ceder at Berkeley Lab to further explore and discover novel solid electrolyte materials that can improve battery performance even further.

This work represents one of the many ways in which experts at the Berkeley Lab Energy Storage Center are working to enable the nation’s transition to a clean, affordable, and resilient energy future. 

Last year, Ouyang won a NERSC High Performance Computing Achievement Award for “advancing the understanding of chemical short-range order for designing a new generation of commercialized cathode materials.” The award recognizes early-career scientists who have made significant contributions to scientific computation using NERSC resources.

Other scientists contributing to this work are Young-Woon Byeon and Zijian Cai from Berkeley Lab, Jue Liu from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Lincoln Miara and Yan Wang from the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology. 

The Molecular Foundry and NERSC are DOE Office of Science user facilities at Berkeley Lab. 

This research was supported by the DOE Vehicle Technologies Office.
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